Sunday, September 9, 2012

Random info about Japan you may not find anywhere else!!

I have been experiencing so many new things and have so much to tell you all that this post has to be an ADD edition!  I have to jump onto many different topics so hold on tight, here we go!

Manhole covers


Japanese put human effort into making their environment beautiful and this includes their manhole covers.  Each one seems to be different and some are even painted.  I take a picture every time I can (without getting run over)!  I would love to make some prints and frame them as a group.  When you walk past one that is exceptional it is like you just received a special gift available only to those who take the time to really look.

Critters

We have a lot of critters.  We have a constant hum/buzz//vibration of cicadas.  They are really loud.  My Dad has tinnitus and I think I have a new found idea of what it must be like when his ears are really ringing.  When I first heard it I thought it was an equipment sound and it really took a few days for me to believe it was derived from nature!  They are shedding right now and we found 6 perfectly empty exoskeletons that look like they made a small slit in the back and slipped out.  They are not my favorite.

We also have big nasty black crows that are mean and aggressive.  People with small children are briefed not to allow their children to eat a sandwich outside.  Crows will fly down, take the food, and scare a kids half to death.  I think Alfred Hitchcock made a trip to Japan before he filmed The Birds. My mother-in-law has never been a crow fan.  They will be moving further down her list after their visit in November!

My favorite has to be the crickets that are in my house and chirp only at night.  I haven't let it bother me too much since I think that they are said to bring good luck.  The highlight was a few nights ago when a cricket was chirping away in my bedroom, Gary had a light snore going and his Blackberry makes a gong sound whenever he gets an e mail.  I was laying there trying to ignore the chirps and Gary's phone just starts going off.  I felt like I was in a bad old Asian movie of some kind. I put up with it all for about 15 minutes when I excused myself, wrapped up in a few beach towels, put in ear plugs and hit the rack in our guest room!!  We will have blankets in a week when our things come Friday so if you are thinking of visiting you will not have to suffer the same fate.

The grand finale is this fabulous centipede-like catterpillar .  It was crawling along and has a little antennae on its back that bobs from side to side!  It looked just like the dragons the Chinese are always parading under for Chinese New Year!  Some of the centipedes are poisonous and can bite.  I never want to see one in my house but I enjoyed this beauty outside!

Costco

I love this store.  I just love it.  I love the items they sell, I think they have great customer service and sometimes I just have to get a hot dog!  I don't have to live without it here!!  I am so excited!  It is like walking into something so familiar and yet there are some real differences.   For example, when you get a sample of their fresh salmon, they just slice a sashimi sized slice and put that little morsel in a cup!  Oishii! (That means delicious!) Also along with cheese pizza and pepperoni there is seafood pizza.  Same price as the other two but loaded with shrimp, scallops and fresh veggies. 

The Japanese have fallen in love with bread and as I looked around their store with a bread section three times the size of ours, the days are numbered for their skinny little bodies! They also had a wall of bacon.  It was bacon cured many different ways, cut in many different thicknesses and in general as much bacon as I have ever seen.  The cart escalator was a new experience and they trays of sushi we got for lunch were amazing.  I will be there often.

Pets

For reasons I am still unclear on, puppies and kittens are VERY expensive here.  Many of the larger chains have pets for sale and the prices are astounding.  The Golden pictured here is 128,000 yen.  That is about $1,500.  For.a.puppy.  I bought my car here for the same price.  Keep in mind this puppy still poops, sheds and tears things up!  The dog food we used in the states sells out in town for $120 a bag.  Needless to say, our babies are doing fine on their new food available on base.  I keep debating the bag of dried whole fish as dog treats....their breath is so bad now I just can not imagine what that would do.

Church

We have found a really cool Japanese/English church that reminds us a lot of our home church, Vineyard Community Church in Va Beach.  Here is their web site www.newhope-yokahama.org.  It was started from a church in Hawaii and we actually say Aloha at the beginning of the service like we are at a luau!  It is wonderful but it does require a few trains to get there and we are not sure yet if we have landed there.  We also like being a part of the base community church and that is of course a 5 minute drive.  Time will tell but check out the web site!  It is so cool to sing familiar songs in half English, half Japanese!

I have so many more stories to tell!  The next update has to be about cars.  They have the funniest names and driving here is really a trip.  I had a couple of sad days last week.  I would have loved to sit with a friend and just be......the newness of everything can be exhausting.  This too shall pass and it wont be long until this adventure will come to a close and we'll be back home.  In the mean time, stay tuned!!

Monday, September 3, 2012

Fish markets and high fashion

We have been in Japan for two weeks and three days, not that we are counting!  It is hard to believe that we are here at all. On one hand it seems like we have been gone for so long from all that is familiar and on the other hand we have settled in so well that it is hard to believe that we just got here.

Today is Monday of Labor Day weekend.  We decided it was the perfect time to get away since the Japanese do not share this holiday and we expected the trains to be empty.  Our closest train station is a solid 30 minute walk from our house.  Casey has done this walk and she still talks about it...We have a way to cheat this a little by parking at Gary's work and walking 2 minutes to a bus and for about $3.00 per person you can get to the train.  This is what we did today.  

Figuring out the train schedule is made easier with technology and they are easier to navigate than you would think they would be! We made it to the biggest fish market in the world,Tsukiji, about an hour too late.  We were able to walk around and grasp the magnitude of the place but missed seeing the big fish that makes them so famous.  Smelled them though!  Plus, we got a great view of the thousands of Styrofoam containers that held the fish earlier in the day.
Gary and I made an attempt to see this spectacular sight in 1992, and it was closed that day.  Two strikes...
During our travels, we had to descend about three levels down into the subway system.  I am not much for deep, cavernous, holes in the ground....and tubes to travel in.  After two steep levels, I was telling Casey that we were very close to hell...she does not think I am funny, still.  Luckily I am also cheap and I was able to get over it as soon as we made a price comparison!  The subway was not crowded and the waiting areas were roomy so I have nothing to complain about.  We had decided to head to Harajuku.  This is a high fashion district and it did not disappoint!  We saw girls dressed like Anime characters, crazy eye make-up and amazing clothes. None of this is an option for Casey since she would look silly dressed in anime, the eye makeup is a no go and the clothes were NOT affordable!


We came home and we are getting ready for the normal part of our lives, school, work and for me orientation classes to familiarize myself with the base and all the great programs they have to offer!  

We miss home.....we keep meeting people who remind us of people we have left in VA.....It is not easy.  Casey and I know we have connected with people we will have a hard time leaving behind when the time comes.  This is the blessing of a military life!  Sad good byes means making new friends, that lead to another sad good bye!!  For right now, it is all Hellos and we are loving it!